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Investing in E-Health: What it Takes to Sustain Consumer Health Informatics

David H. Gustafson ; Patricia Flatley Brennan ; Robert P. Hawkins (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Health Informatics

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-49507-1

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-49508-8

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Simpson Hospital, 1997–2000

Pauley R. Johnson; Susan Dinauer; Gail Casper; John Fellows

Although, the notion of trust has been considered as a primitive for establishing relationships among nodes in ad-hoc networks, syntax and metrics of trust are not well defined. This paper studies computing of trust in ad-hoc networks and makes the following three contributions. Firstly, the notion of trust is formalized in terms of predict functions and strategy functions. Namely, the notion of trust in this paper is defined as a predict function that can be further evaluated by a strategy function for a pre-described action; Secondly, structures of trust are formalized as a map between a path in the underlying network graph and the corresponding edge of its transitive closure graph; Thirdly, a generic model for computing of trust in the small world is proposed.

Pp. 155-171

Caregiver Resource Center Network, 1999–2002

Leah Eskenazi; Pauley R. Johnson; Tracy Siegler; Gail Casper; John Fellows

Although, the notion of trust has been considered as a primitive for establishing relationships among nodes in ad-hoc networks, syntax and metrics of trust are not well defined. This paper studies computing of trust in ad-hoc networks and makes the following three contributions. Firstly, the notion of trust is formalized in terms of predict functions and strategy functions. Namely, the notion of trust in this paper is defined as a predict function that can be further evaluated by a strategy function for a pre-described action; Secondly, structures of trust are formalized as a map between a path in the underlying network graph and the corresponding edge of its transitive closure graph; Thirdly, a generic model for computing of trust in the small world is proposed.

Pp. 173-192

Key Learning and Advice for Implementers

David H. Gustafson; Patricia Flatley Brennan

Although, the notion of trust has been considered as a primitive for establishing relationships among nodes in ad-hoc networks, syntax and metrics of trust are not well defined. This paper studies computing of trust in ad-hoc networks and makes the following three contributions. Firstly, the notion of trust is formalized in terms of predict functions and strategy functions. Namely, the notion of trust in this paper is defined as a predict function that can be further evaluated by a strategy function for a pre-described action; Secondly, structures of trust are formalized as a map between a path in the underlying network graph and the corresponding edge of its transitive closure graph; Thirdly, a generic model for computing of trust in the small world is proposed.

Pp. 193-215